88 fÄ '''..''.. ..... r\:.. , ' h l : ' ;', "," Ji{ .::;:::::::,::: :- :::,,, :' " '.". ' ';;' .': .,.., :' .'1% ;;;::; "':::':" ;,;:;-,,\' " ,':::;;:::,,:;l ! : w ,(, . -=-:.:. ';.tr:*: -;,.. ' ,. ',: !f:',:/.'< IJ:....? .:::::: :;-.. ,.:;:1*:.. .. "'1 " ;'0' , ,f ,{,e: ' ...' k' ; \ ., . ' f1 : :,.,,;;(;r :;:: ,,-, ' i ' ) ... . 2 ,\/{f( ð' J ,','.;..".:;:,':-::0..)>:::... ...{;.....'..... "",.. :,..' ,,' ":""'1,:':::(,: /4 "/ " í I I J I:' ... ., , , ' ! :",:" '...., :: .." 1 " .., . . ... ,..'.".. .. ....... . ,.. . .......>>:.;.....:.:.... . ,J. {; ?:ih :::,:':"" "': :,' .. ... , , , ' , , f :..rnr / .., ,': "' '.1 ':I .:.:-i , .:-..:. ,::,:.::..:::::: )f.' i t{::::::: ,-- ..Þ' ;:1 (: , _1' "' 1 ".': ,',. 'aea 01' n", r' ., ,. ,,' ,.{ $& ;..#:"',:'*'AM$K+":t:-::*:::,:f'-::-,<<,.::,>:,:,Ç>:,:" ...,,#.":',':: ", :"',..,'..,:. '... ,',......",":',': ' ': :-,: :;: f6 i;.i.{:'<w":,:,:,.. ,',..'..;,.. , :*, ' :, "" ," ,:.A<",, '//. , , , ."S:,. S ...:........ .. ..::.;.:-:.,...........i:::{::$ w..:-::-..::-4 :-".. The call of the great outdoors in the incomparable Alleghenies. . . the pure and delightful mountain ozone . . . the wonderful scenery . . . the three finest resort golf courses in America and the five championship ten- nis courts, with tournaments of national importance and famous players from all over the country . . . and then the 250 miles of mountain trails and bridle paths . . . the stables of fine blooded horses . . . the charm- ing Casino . . . the Mosaic-tiled indoor swimming pool, fed by the waters of Alvon . . . the world-renowned White Sulphur waters. . . an estate of 7000 acres. . . delightful days and comfortable nights . . . everything that C:C:America's Finest Resort" can offer, indoors and outdoors . . . these are the glory that is THE GREENBRIER AND COTTAGES If'hite Sulphur Sþrinr)s, 7fést YJrqinia# Here the true spirit of C:C:Southern Hospitality" adds warmth to the welcome. Here the youth and beauty of the land, the captains of trade, finance and industry and the plain business man and his family comprise a glorified C:C:house party" unequalled for charming social life and aristocratic democracy. The Hydrotherapeutic and Bath establishment, perhaps the finest in America, with the complete Medical De- partment, insure the proper utilization of the natural r;tL.. health-giving resources for constructive upbuilding and . ' > , rest for which White Sulphur has long been famous. r:."!" ' '" ;,;' '" ' White Sulphur Springs, on the Main. .. >, :: : : : I:il : f:( " .: '" ..... '._ >ôi-,.'f;,. r ':) :î'::ii if :!C<:< ,:;r' . .... i...' ; " .... ....., < :; t ; ;M i : f:: SÞtj: l ::1 .. ... .........:.....ÿ.yÿ.. .>>..................................... N' ' ........:.,;;.:.;......:.;... ... :.... .( , . .......-.;.... :.,...',...'""", ",... OCTOBER 5. 192,9 <$ . . . zation I hereby append for the reader's benefi t a partial list of the falsehoods that reached my ears during a recent ten-day crossing: 1. That the captain, commenting on the glasslike sea the first day out, had given it as his opinion that the sea would remain equally glasslike for the entire voyage. (The captain ventured no such opinion.) 2. That tickets for dining-room places would be distributed outside the lower dining-room at 11 A.M. on the first day. (They were given out inside the upper dining-room at 10 A.M. on the second day.) 3. That the bar would run out of beer three days before we landed. (This was a lie.) 4. That three hundred passengers were seasick on the fifth day out. ( Not more than twenty passengers were sea- si ck. ) 5. That Richard Halliburton was on board our boat. (Richard Halli- burton was not on board our boat.) 6. That an airplane had been sighted over us jn the middle of the ocean. (Nobody on our boat sighted any air- planes in the middle of any ocean or over the middle of any ocean.) 7. That it was not necessary to have a French visa to go to France. (Which was wrong.) 8. That the captain, on the third day out, had remarked that he expected to see waves higher than our boat. (He had no such expectations.) 9. That we would arrive at Ply- mouth at noon on Sunday. (We ar- rived Sunday at lOp .M. ) 10. That we would arrive at Plymouth Monday morning. (See above. ) 11. That we were about to run into a storm which had blown four lifeboats off the So-and-So two hours before. (Subsequent investigation dis- closed the fact that the So-and-So was, at the time, in drydock for repairs. ) 12. That on Stunt Night the dan,ce orchestra would play until 1 A.M. (It played until 11 :30 P.M.) 13. That our shjp was to be quaran- tined at Plymouth for the bubonic plague, which had broken out on board. (Which was untrue.) 14. That several of our crew had mutinied and been put in chains. (Nobody was put in chains.) And of these glibly promulgated and more glibly assimilated bits of misin- formation I only contributed Numbers 13 and 14 as my share. -p ARKE CUMMINGS